Short story: somebody got lost in two different indices. pi is an index in the stream and is explained on page 198 of the 32000-spec (however 1-based there), and ps is an index to something in PDF.js. I used the code from flag 0 (which works) to understand which is which. It is also important to understand that for flags 1,2 and 3, the stream is always assigned to the same coordinates and colors. What changes is which "old" coordinates and colors are assigned to what is "missing" in the stream. This is why for these flags, the code is identical except for the assignments in the first "row".
This patch refactors the code responsible for setting the annotation's rectangle. Its goal is to:
- Actually check that the input array is actually an array, and if so, that it contains exactly four elements.
- Only call `normalizeRect` if the input array is valid, i.e., we do not call it for the default rectangle anymore.
Unit tests are provided just like with the other patches in this series.
Fixes#6106
To avoid future regressions, two new unit tests were added:
1. A new PDF based on the report from #6106, which contains an
OpenAction of type JavaScript and a string "this.print({...}".
2. An existing PDF from https://bugzil.la/1001080 (from #4698).
Although it does not matter, since we don't execute the JavaScript code,
I have also changed "print(true)" to "print({})" since the print method
takes an object (not a boolean). See "Printing PDF documents", page 62:
http://adobe.com/content/dam/Adobe/en/devnet/acrobat/pdfs/js_developer_guide.pdf
- Use rimraf instead of a custom removeDirSync implementation - rimraf
deals with edge cases like EPERM on Windows.
- Detect when the process exits before it was requested via stop(),
instead of running the cleanup handler.
- Add fallback for process detection when the process exits before it
was requested. On *nix systems, this is done via pkill and pgrep, on
Windows this is done via wmic.
- Add some asserts to check the preconditions of the methods, and output
some status information to aid debugging in case of failure.
I have verified that these changes work on ArchLinux and Windows XP,
using Chrome and Firefox, as follows:
1. node make unittest
2. node make unittest
3. Restart the Firefox process via the task manager as soon as possible.
4. node make unittest
5. Temporary lock a file/directory within the temporary profile
directory until the tests have finished, and then unlock the file
within 10 seconds.
In all cases, the auxilary browser processes are killed, and the
temporary profile directory is wiped.
Basic mathematics would suggest that a double negative should always become positive, but it appears that Adobe Reader simply ignores that case. Hence I think that it makes sense for us to do the same.
Fixes 6218.
When the parser finds a stream, it retrieves the Length from the stream
dictionary and advances the lexer to the offset as specified in Length.
If this Length is incorrect, the lexer could end up anywhere.
When the lexer gets in an invalid state, it could throw errors. For
example, in issue 6108, the lexer ends up inside the stream data. This
stream has the ASCIIHexDecode filter, so all characters are made up from
ASCII characters, and the lexer interprets it as a command token. Tokens
cannot be longer than 127 bytes, so eventually 128 bytes are consumed
and the lexer throws "Command token too long" error.
Another possible error is "Illegal character: 41" when the lexer happens
to end up at a ')' due to the length mismatch.
These problems are solved by catching lexer errors and recovering the
parser via the existing stream length detection branch.
Xref offsets are relative to the start of the PDF data, not to the start
of the PDF file. This is clear if you look at the other code:
- In the XRef's readXRefTable and processXRefTable methods of XRef, the
offset of a xref entry is set to the bytes as given by a PDF file.
These values are always relative to the start of the PDF file (%PDF-).
- The XRef's readXRef method adds the start offset of the stream to
Xref entry's offset: "stream.pos = startXRef + stream.start".
Clearly, this line assumes that the entry offset excludes the start
offset.
However, when the PDF is parsed in recovery mode, the xref table is
filled with entries whose offset is relative to the start of the stream
rather than the PDF file. This is incorrect, and the fix is to subtract
the start offset of the stream from the entry's byte offset.
The manually created PDF file serves as a regression test. It is a valid
PDF, except:
- The integer to point to the start of the xref table and the %%EOF
trailer are missing. This will activate recovery mode in PDF.js
- Some junk was added before the start of the PDF file. This exposes the
bad offset bug.
Doing this helped uncover an issue with the `getDestination` implementation.
Currently if a named destination doesn't exist, the method (in `obj.js`) may return `undefined` which leads to the promise being stuck in a pending state.
*Note:* returning `null` for this case is consistent with other methods, e.g. `getOutline` and `getAttachments`.
The patch adds a test to ensure that `getStats` returns the expected result after the page has been parsed, and cleans up the existing test a bit.
Also, since I'm touching the file anyway, I'm making a small adjustment of the `getDownloadInfo` test. (I have no idea why I didn't just write it like this initially.)
This patch adds:
- Unit tests for the annotation border style class
- Regression test (self-made) for the annotation border style class
- Documentation generation using JSDoc
Currently in the tests which check that incorrect passwords are rejected, we don't ensure that the exceptions thrown are the ones we expect. This patch improves the current situation, so that we actually can be sure that the code "fails" in the correct way.
*Note:* This patch also fixes some cases of weird indentation in the file.
Fixes 6068.
The most notable issue with the font in question is that the `differences` array contains lots of strange entries (of the type `uniXXXX`, instead of proper glyph names).